AALL Legal Innovation & Technology SIS

The LIT-SIS Board and Grants & Awards Committee is thrilled to announce the recipients of this year’s grants and awards.
2024 LIT-SIS AALL Leadership Academy Grant
Christopher Collins, Research & Emerging Technologies Librarian, Western New England University School of Law
2024 Recipient of the Kenneth J. Hirsh Distinguished Service Award
Jennifer L. Wondracek, Director of

Guest post by Christopher Collins, Research & Emerging Technologies Librarian, Western New England University School of Law
I’ve recently returned from the AALL Leadership Academy in Chicago. I’d like to share some of my impressions and why you might consider attending. I will also remind you that there is funding to attend.
First, know what

Guest post by Justin Tung, Reference Librarian at Tarlton Law Library, University of Texas School of Law
Recently, Adam Bent, a fellow Law Librarian and former classmate of mine, published an article in Pace Law Review entitled “Large Language Models: AI’s Legal Revolution.”[1] In it, he lays out a well-researched history of Chatbots and

Let’s talk about big tech – physically big, that is. With all the focus on cloud-based tools and other software, it’s easy to forget about the hardware. Here are a few of the most useful, novel, or interesting “large tech” items we’ve seen or heard of in libraries recently. Add your own in the comments!

Survey Results from LIT-SIS Membership
LIT-SIS conducted a survey of members that concluded mid-December 2023. Participation was good with 66 respondents. Here is a brief summary of the results:

  • Most respondents would prefer quarterly educational programing/professional development events (not including the AALL Annual meeting).
  • 21% of the respondents reported they attend the AALL Annual meeting


Over the time off between holidays at the end of 2023, I had the opportunity of checking out Reader, Come Home: The Reading Brain in a Digital World by Maryanne Wolf from my local public library. Wolf looks into the digital age’s impact on the human brain, particularly in the context of reading.
She introduces

Guest post by Justin Tung [1]
What Lexis+ AI is, and What it Promises
On Friday, November 17, 2023, Lexis sent an email announcing access to its new generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) tool called Lexis+ AI. It promises “the fastest legal generative AI with conversational search, drafting, summarization, document analysis, and linked hallucination-free legal citations.”